Out in the Open: Investigating Passive Airborne eDNA Detection of Bats at Artificial Feeding Stations

ABSTRACT Environmental DNA (eDNA) is a valuable biomonitoring tool, but application in terrestrial settings remains challenging due to a lack of generalizable sampling approaches. With bat species needing urgent research attention, airborne eDNA may offer this generalizability, as current eDNA sampl...

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Main Authors: Daniel E. Sanchez, Faith M. Walker, Savannah J. Marriott, Anna L. Riley, Sarah Stankavich, Amanda M. Adams, Donald Solick, Doug Bradley, Christian Newman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-05-01
Series:Environmental DNA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/edn3.70108
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author Daniel E. Sanchez
Faith M. Walker
Savannah J. Marriott
Anna L. Riley
Sarah Stankavich
Amanda M. Adams
Donald Solick
Doug Bradley
Christian Newman
author_facet Daniel E. Sanchez
Faith M. Walker
Savannah J. Marriott
Anna L. Riley
Sarah Stankavich
Amanda M. Adams
Donald Solick
Doug Bradley
Christian Newman
author_sort Daniel E. Sanchez
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT Environmental DNA (eDNA) is a valuable biomonitoring tool, but application in terrestrial settings remains challenging due to a lack of generalizable sampling approaches. With bat species needing urgent research attention, airborne eDNA may offer this generalizability, as current eDNA sampling for bats is mostly limited to conspicuous sources (e.g., guano). While previous studies detected bats from roosts and open‐air sites using active air sampling, it remains uncertain whether bats can be readily detected from the open air using passive approaches. In central Texas, we used passive air sampling to determine if we could recover bat assemblages with metabarcoding and an imperiled focal species (tricolored bat, Perimyotis subflavus) with qPCR. Outside two cave locations, we positioned passive air samplers (two collection media per sampler; n = 24 media) near artificial prey patches, monitoring acoustically for bat activity and foraging. In the lab, we subjected the media to multiple eDNA extraction methods, direct DNA extraction, and two resuspension‐concentration approaches (filtration and pelleting). Metabarcoding allowed the detection of two bat species within a single sample, while qPCR allowed detection of P. subflavus in two samples. Although the detections all came from direct extraction, pelleting substantially improved taxonomic recovery and sample success for vertebrates overall. Detection of bat eDNA from passive samplers establishes a lower bound possibility for open‐air settings, and the low number of detections highlights the need for improved sampling strategies. We offer recommendations to enhance future efforts and introduce a qPCR assay for P. subflavus that can be used in a variety of eDNA contexts.
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issn 2637-4943
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publishDate 2025-05-01
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spelling doaj-art-1415f290f5a74cbf814fcd1eefea70582025-08-20T03:31:49ZengWileyEnvironmental DNA2637-49432025-05-0173n/an/a10.1002/edn3.70108Out in the Open: Investigating Passive Airborne eDNA Detection of Bats at Artificial Feeding StationsDaniel E. Sanchez0Faith M. Walker1Savannah J. Marriott2Anna L. Riley3Sarah Stankavich4Amanda M. Adams5Donald Solick6Doug Bradley7Christian Newman8School of Forestry Northern Arizona University Flagstaff Arizona USASchool of Forestry Northern Arizona University Flagstaff Arizona USASchool of Forestry Northern Arizona University Flagstaff Arizona USASchool of Forestry Northern Arizona University Flagstaff Arizona USABat Conservation International Austin Texas USABat Conservation International Austin Texas USAElectric Power Research Institute USAElectric Power Research Institute USAElectric Power Research Institute USAABSTRACT Environmental DNA (eDNA) is a valuable biomonitoring tool, but application in terrestrial settings remains challenging due to a lack of generalizable sampling approaches. With bat species needing urgent research attention, airborne eDNA may offer this generalizability, as current eDNA sampling for bats is mostly limited to conspicuous sources (e.g., guano). While previous studies detected bats from roosts and open‐air sites using active air sampling, it remains uncertain whether bats can be readily detected from the open air using passive approaches. In central Texas, we used passive air sampling to determine if we could recover bat assemblages with metabarcoding and an imperiled focal species (tricolored bat, Perimyotis subflavus) with qPCR. Outside two cave locations, we positioned passive air samplers (two collection media per sampler; n = 24 media) near artificial prey patches, monitoring acoustically for bat activity and foraging. In the lab, we subjected the media to multiple eDNA extraction methods, direct DNA extraction, and two resuspension‐concentration approaches (filtration and pelleting). Metabarcoding allowed the detection of two bat species within a single sample, while qPCR allowed detection of P. subflavus in two samples. Although the detections all came from direct extraction, pelleting substantially improved taxonomic recovery and sample success for vertebrates overall. Detection of bat eDNA from passive samplers establishes a lower bound possibility for open‐air settings, and the low number of detections highlights the need for improved sampling strategies. We offer recommendations to enhance future efforts and introduce a qPCR assay for P. subflavus that can be used in a variety of eDNA contexts.https://doi.org/10.1002/edn3.70108acoustic monitoringcavesenvironmental DNAPerimyotis subflavusTexas
spellingShingle Daniel E. Sanchez
Faith M. Walker
Savannah J. Marriott
Anna L. Riley
Sarah Stankavich
Amanda M. Adams
Donald Solick
Doug Bradley
Christian Newman
Out in the Open: Investigating Passive Airborne eDNA Detection of Bats at Artificial Feeding Stations
Environmental DNA
acoustic monitoring
caves
environmental DNA
Perimyotis subflavus
Texas
title Out in the Open: Investigating Passive Airborne eDNA Detection of Bats at Artificial Feeding Stations
title_full Out in the Open: Investigating Passive Airborne eDNA Detection of Bats at Artificial Feeding Stations
title_fullStr Out in the Open: Investigating Passive Airborne eDNA Detection of Bats at Artificial Feeding Stations
title_full_unstemmed Out in the Open: Investigating Passive Airborne eDNA Detection of Bats at Artificial Feeding Stations
title_short Out in the Open: Investigating Passive Airborne eDNA Detection of Bats at Artificial Feeding Stations
title_sort out in the open investigating passive airborne edna detection of bats at artificial feeding stations
topic acoustic monitoring
caves
environmental DNA
Perimyotis subflavus
Texas
url https://doi.org/10.1002/edn3.70108
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